A Siwawa ( Chinese: 丝娃娃; pinyin: sī wá wá, also known as "Guiyang Spring rolls" [1] [2] or "silk doll") is a Chinese dish, native to and a local specialty of the Guizhou province, consisting of a paper thin glutinous rice pancake that is small enough to fit easily in one's palm, and is wrapped around fillings of julienned fresh, fermented, or stir-fried vegetables such as shredded cucumber, pickled turnip, fried soybeans, crushed chilis, shredded kelp, shredded potato, pickled radish, mung bean sprouts, zhe ergen, pickled fiddleheads, and jueba bracken fern roots. [3] [4] [5] [6] [7] Some vendors include fried pork ( Cuishao/脆哨) as a filling. [7] The dish traditionally is a common street food or hawker food but eventually started to appear at events such as weddings. [4] It is one of the most well-known of Guizhou's traditional snack foods but is also eaten as a formal meal. [6] [7]
Spicy and sour-flavoured sauces, known as zhanshui, are commonly incorporated into wraps or used as dipping sauces. One popular sauce recipe includes a combination of ingredients such as stock, dried chili flakes, and sesame oil. [3] [6]
The name of the dish, "baby in swaddling clothes," is derived from its appearance, where strips of ingredients are wrapped in a rice pancake, resembling a wrapped infant. [5] [3] [4] [6] It also resembles an uncooked egg roll and is sometime considered "a member of the spring roll family". [5] [7]
A Siwawa ( Chinese: 丝娃娃; pinyin: sī wá wá, also known as "Guiyang Spring rolls" [1] [2] or "silk doll") is a Chinese dish, native to and a local specialty of the Guizhou province, consisting of a paper thin glutinous rice pancake that is small enough to fit easily in one's palm, and is wrapped around fillings of julienned fresh, fermented, or stir-fried vegetables such as shredded cucumber, pickled turnip, fried soybeans, crushed chilis, shredded kelp, shredded potato, pickled radish, mung bean sprouts, zhe ergen, pickled fiddleheads, and jueba bracken fern roots. [3] [4] [5] [6] [7] Some vendors include fried pork ( Cuishao/脆哨) as a filling. [7] The dish traditionally is a common street food or hawker food but eventually started to appear at events such as weddings. [4] It is one of the most well-known of Guizhou's traditional snack foods but is also eaten as a formal meal. [6] [7]
Spicy and sour-flavoured sauces, known as zhanshui, are commonly incorporated into wraps or used as dipping sauces. One popular sauce recipe includes a combination of ingredients such as stock, dried chili flakes, and sesame oil. [3] [6]
The name of the dish, "baby in swaddling clothes," is derived from its appearance, where strips of ingredients are wrapped in a rice pancake, resembling a wrapped infant. [5] [3] [4] [6] It also resembles an uncooked egg roll and is sometime considered "a member of the spring roll family". [5] [7]